This Root Beer Syrup recipe remains one of my kids’ favourites. It is the best, most authentic root beer you can make at home unless you break out a carboy and fermenting lock. And while I’ve been know to do that sort of thing, this is an achievable, delicious, and simple means to a homemade Root Beer Syrup end.
I am a fizzy drinks gal. My usual preference is for plain or flavoured (but not sweetened seltzer) but I have a deep and abiding love for two kinds of soda: ginger ale and root beer. I love the warm, spicy flavours of both of those. What I don’t adore, however, is the insane amount of sugar in most commercially available sodas.
My dad taught me to make my own ginger ale a few years back and that took care of the need for ginger ale, but until the last couple of weeks, I didn’t have a way to satisfy my root beer cravings without getting a sugar bomb in the process. With the exception of a few boutique brands of root beer (that are very tasty indeed but also pretty pricey), the sugar bomb in those sodas came in the form of high fructose corn syrup. I’m not going to wade into a debate here. Intelligent people disagree (vociferously) on the subject, but in our family we just don’t consume much HFCS.
I’ve tried making my own root beers from extract kits, but I was always a little disappointed because I like making things from the ground up. Buying a little bottle of some liquid and adding water and sugar just kind of felt like cheating. Yes, I realize I’m a little nuts.
But I discovered something. I’m clearly not alone in thinking this way. I discovered Hank Shaw a.k.a. Hunter Angler Gardener Cook. Hank Shaw is, in a nutshell, awesome. I’ve always had a DIY bent, but Hank Shaw?
I’m in an analogy frame of mind, since I just finished up standardized testing with my kids, and I’m thinking that might be the best way to describe him. I am to Hank Shaw as Sandra Lee is to Martha Stewart. Sure, Sandra Lee decorates a table and whips up a cocktail, but Martha felled the tree, built the table, hand-wove the cloth for the decorations, smelted the metal for the silverware, designed and threw her own pottery, raised the animals and vegetables, slaughtered and prepared everything herself AND was a supermodel in the process.
In short, I have MAD respect for Hank Shaw. I have no idea whether his hair is perfectly coifed, but I rather suspect it is.
The point is this; Hank Shaw posted a recipe for homemade root beer syrup that looked like what I’d been seeking for ages. I had some dried burdock root (it grows EVERYWHERE around here, so I’m not sure this gets me my foraging badge), I ordered dried sassafras (because that DOESN’T grow around here), and raided my spice cabinet for the other bits and pieces*, and set to infusing.
*That spell of detective work just might get me the foraging badge after all!
The key to Root Beer Syrup is a slow infusion (decoction, tisane, what-have-you) of water with the roots and spices. After it simmers a bit, some molasses is added (for both colour and flavour) then you simmer again.
Then comes the WHAT?!? portion of the programme: wintergreen. I’m not kidding you. Go pop open a bottle of root beer and sniff. What are you getting? You’re getting the smell of sassafras and wintergreen (although of the two, wintergreen is probably the only one that is actually in commercial root beers any more.)
Don’t skip this! And please, you might be tempted, but don’t sub in peppermint. The wintergreen is truly important. If you can’t lay your hands on fresh wintergreen leaves, you can always use wintergreen flavour or extract.
As soon as the roots and spices started simmering my brain was panting, “Root beer. Root beer. Root beer.” It smells so good while it simmers. It smelled so good, in fact, that I dunked a spoon in to lick it. Um, it was not a great at that point.
‘Twas bitter but I carried on and continued the project. I started it late at night, so I let the cool down/infusion process go overnight. In the morning, I strained, measured, added to the pot with sugar and then simmered again.
I dipped my spoon in again, cautiously licked it and holy man. It was good. Root beer syurp was great!
While I like to pour it over ice and top with my beloved plain seltzer for a spicy, rootsy-tootsy root beer beverage, you can also use the syrup to drizzle over your vanilla ice cream for a root beer sundae. On the other hand, you can sweeten your iced tea for a deliciously different sweet tea. Root beer sweet tea. Can I get a heck-yeah from the sweet tea lovers out there?
I’m going to tell you, this is NOT the root beer you get at the store. It just isn’t. It’s real. It has oomph. It has character. It’s not cloyingly sweet (although, if sweet is your thing you can always up the sugar content in the syrup.)
When you smell it and taste it there is no doubt in your mind that this is root beer, but this is root beer as it’s meant to be. I’d take a tall glass of this root beer any day over the stuff on the shelves. My husband, who despises soda in general but likes seltzer, loved this root beer.
Three of my five kids think this the best root beer they’ve ever had. (One of the remaining two just doesn’t like root beer, so he’s consistent. The other decided to be contrary.)
Use this to make Root Beer Syrup:
- Dried Sassafrass Root
- Dried Burdock Root
- Whole Coriander Seeds
- Star Anise
- Clove
- Molasses
- Wintergreen extract
Homemade Root Beer Syrup
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 6 cups water
- 3 ounces dried sassafrass root
- 1/2 ounce dried burdock root
- 1 teaspoon dried whole coriander seeds
- 1 whole star anise
- 1 whole clove
- 1/4 cup dark molasses (not blackstrap)
- 3-4 wintergreen leaves or 2 drops (1/8 teaspoon) wintergreen flavouring or extract
- up to 6 cups sugar preferably raw, but granulated white sugar can also be used
Instructions
- Put the sassafras and burdock roots, coriander seeds, star anise and clove in a heavy-bottomed 2 quart saucepan that has a tight fitting lid. Pour the water over the top of the roots and spices and bring to a boil over high heat. Drop the heat to low and simmer for 15 minutes. If it keeps bubbling up and out, vent the lid just a bit.Add the molasses, stir, replace the lid, and return to a simmer for 5 minutes. Remove the pan from the heat, add the wintergreen flavouring or extract, replace the lid and let the mixture cool to room temperature. (I let mine cool on a cold burner on the stove overnight because I prepared my sassafras infusion late at night.)Line a fine mesh strainer with cheesecloth, place over a large measuring cup with a pouring spout or a pitcher, and pour the cooled infusion into it to strain. Do not press on the contents, but let the roots rest in the strainer for about 30 minutes before proceeding. While that strains, rinse the pot in which you infused it to get any lingering bits of root or spice out of it.Measure your sassafras infusion, return it to the rinsed pot and add an equal amount of sugar -by volume- to the pot. For instance, if you have 4 1/2 cups of infusion, add 4 1/2 cups of sugar. Bring the mixture to a boil, drop the heat to low and let simmer for 5 minutes. Pour the syrup into canning jars, fix clean, new, two-piece lids on top and store in the refrigerator up to a year.!To Make a Root Beer Drink from the Syrup:Use 1 tablespoon of syrup over ice to 1 cup of plain seltzer water. Stir gently. Enjoy!
Nutrition
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!
Reader's Thoughts...
Joan Munro says
Your recipe calls for Sassafrass root. I can ony access Sassafrass bark. Is there a difference in taste between root & bark? … thanks.
Rebecca says
Hi Joan- I’ve heard that sassafras bark tastes a little more citrus-y, but I don’t know that from personal experience. 🙂
Robert Palleja says
how many gallons can of root beer can I flavor with this recipe?
Rebecca says
Hi Robert- That depends both on how reduced you make the concentrate and how strong you’d like the flavour. This could flavour anywhere between 1 to 2 gallons. 🙂
Megan says
I have burdock growing as a weed in my yard. Is that the same kind of burdock?
Rebecca says
Hi Megan! It’s my understanding that it is indeed the same thing… I don’t have any personal experience foraging/harvesting/drying it myself, though, so I can’t advise you on that. 🙂
Irene says
Could I use a sugar substitute to make a diabetic version?
Rebecca says
Hi Irene- I’m not sure whether a sugar substitute works in this situation as I haven’t personally tried it. I do know that sugar acts as a preservative in our syrup, so you may have a shorter shelf life for what you make if you try a sugar substitute.
Chandra says
Follow up and my notes:
Used Sarsaparilla Root and Grandma’s Molasses. Syrup did not get nearly as thick as I personally desired so I reduced over low medium heat for probably 2.5 hours. Added Mexican Vanilla (why not? Mexican Roots, Mexican Vanilla). Cooled, poured probably 1/4 cup over almost a tray of ice then topped a 32 ounce cup with Club Soda and stirred to incorporate.
It’s good but it either seems to be missing something or I just need to get my hands on some sassafras. Almost thinking it might need a touch of ginger root or citrus peel, something tangy and almost bitter. In that spirit, I added a few dashes of Angosturra Bitters to my glass but still can’t put my finger on what I feel is missing. Thanks for the recipe, it was a good start into the abyss of homemade sodas.
Chandra says
The smell of this boiling was just simply atrocious. Tasted fine, but whoo-ee. Now I’m in the cooling process and going to use this as a no-distill moonshine flavoring.
Rebecca says
Well that sounds super fun!!!! I can’t wait to hear what you think!
Russ says
So, I guess that jar that I put in the fridge 2 years ago, is not good anymore. ??
I used most of the syrup that I made for making hard candies (the wintergreen was too much for my tastes; I’d personally only use 1 leaf or less). The candies were good.
Rebecca says
Hi Russ- I’m guessing you’re probably right. 🙂 I’m glad you liked the candies.
Meagan says
Sassafrass isn’t available here locally so I am trying with sarsaparilla. I hope it turns out 😊
Rebecca says
I’ll look forward to hearing what you think, Meagan! I haven’t tried it with sarsparilla. I had to special order my sassafrass root, too. 🙂
Dennis R Thiel says
Wow Thank You, Thank You, Thank You!!!!!!!!!
Dennis T.
Rebecca says
You are very welcome, Dennis! Thank YOU for taking the time to rate the recipe and let me know you like it!
Jordan says
Would this be the same as root beer extract ???
Rebecca says
I’m not sure what makes up root beer extract, but this is definitely brewed from actual roots. 🙂
Andrea says
Are you supposed to use 1 Tblsp. syrup in a cup of ice then top with an additional 1 cup of carbonated water? Or just enough water to fill the ice-filled cup?
I added 1 c of water and it was VERY diluted in flavor. 🙁
Rebecca says
Hi Andrea- I believe the instruction was to start with 1 tablespoon and then augment to taste. I have one son who likes it at the 1 tablespoon level, and the rest prefer vastly more than that. 🙂
Teresa says
Could I use a sugar substitute? Or does the mixture need the sugar for the fermentation process?
I would think the molasses would provide enough sugar to feed the yeast?
Rebecca says
Hi Teresa- As this is a “fresh” syrup, I’d say you’d be fine with subbing in molasses if you prefer the sugar. As I haven’t tried it, though, I am not sure how it would taste. 🙂
hazel Dannatt says
Hello, thank you for posting your recipe. For the sassifras and burdock, do you use dried root powder, or dried root please?
Sorry if it’s a dumb question – I’ve eventually found a supplier for the UK, but they stock both dried root and dried root powder, and I don’t know which I need.
Thank you
Rebecca says
That’s not dumb at all, Hazel! Use the dried root, not the powder, if it is an option!
Lonnie says
This seems like excessive amount of sugar. Wouldn’t less sugar work or not.
Rebecca says
Hi Lonnie- Just as a reminder, you’re not drinking the syrup, you’re diluting it massively with soda water. 🙂 It tastes good like this, so I haven’t experimented with less sugar. It’s still significantly lower in sugar than most commercial root beers.
Amy says
Would this recipe work with honey or maple syrup instead of sugar? I don’t consume “sugar”. I like using honey, maple syrup or fruit as a sweetener.
Rebecca says
Hi Amy- I have not tried it with honey or maple syrup. I can say that it would definitely change the flavour profile, but as to whether you’d like it that way or not, I’d have to defer to you. 🙂
JOlene says
This would be great to add to water Kiefer during secondary fermentation.
Meagan says
Yes! Yes it would 😊
JB says
How long will it keep?
Rebecca says
Hi JB: the safety rule of thumb for simple syrups is generally one month in the refrigerator.
Laura says
Hi! Thanks so much for this recipe. I look forward to trying to make it. One question, though: why not use blackstrap molasses? That happens to be what I have on hand, so I was hoping to be able to use it up!
Rebecca says
Hi Laura- I’m personally of the opinion that blackstrap molasses is too strong for this particular application. If you decide to try it and like it, though, I’d love for you to check back in and let me know!
Russ says
I made the syrup successfully. The flavor is fantastic; albeit, a bit heavy on the herbal notes. I have decided to transform it into hard candy. If you have any suggestions, I would greatly appreciate it. Thanks for the recipe.
Rebecca says
Great idea, Russ! I’ll give it some thought, too!
kyle jones says
Good recipe. I made some additions that make the receipt taste smoother and richer.
1) Added 1/4 cup licorice root – adds sweetness and smoothness.
2) added 3/4 cup maltodextrin. – this gives that thick and creamy mouth feel of root beer. I just used 3/4 cup Splenda since it is 99% maltodextrin and 1% spenta sweetener. You can reduce the amount of overall sugar this way but I didn’t reduce since I like my root beer extra sweet.